The one
time I actually got somewhat excited about a baseball game was during a World
Series, back in 1993. I was in a sports bar watching the game with my future
wife and avid Jays fan Shauna, and I saw Joe Carter knock in the legendary winning
home run to win the Blue Jays the World Series. That was fun to see. The city
of Toronto exploded in fandamonium for the next 24 hours and it was something I
had never before experienced. I was in downtown Toronto on Yonge Street that night
along with one hundred thousand Blue Jays fans and it was quite a celebration.
At one point I actually feared for my life, not because anyone was violent, but
because I found myself in a crowd surge and was pushed up against a car with
nowhere to go. Toronto fans are very
enthusiastic. I also attended one of those Yonge Street fan parties when the Leafs
uncharacteristically made it to (I believe) the semi-finals, over a decade ago.
I cannot imagine what the city would do if they became Stanley Cup contenders.
They may be knocking on the door soon, because they looked strangely
competitive at the end on last year’s abbreviated season. That is something Leafs
fans have not seen in a long time.
Big
earthquake in the Philippines. Typhoon Wipha hits Japan, the worst one in ten
years. They recovered that Chelyabinsk meteorite from a lake in Russia - the one
that landed recently and from which the shock wave injured about 1600 people. All
those injuries were caused by a chunk of rock that is about the size of a coffee
table. This leads me to wonder, what happens if a really big one hits? While
the odds are low, it often strikes me as amusing and ironic that human beings
assume it will be a manmade disaster that takes out planet earth, when in fact
it might be something uncontrollable, like a seismic catastrophe, or a big meteorite,
or a cyclical shift in our climate. Certainly, we can and probably should
rethink poisoning our water supply by fracking, or invent some more earth
friendly solutions to ozone-depleting energy production, but come on, we are
one cosmic burp away from annihilation. Won’t all those pandas, and rhinos, and
snow leopards, and Appalacian snail darters be laughing in heaven when the big
one sucker punches mankind. It’s the cosmic Darwin Award waiting to be
presented. And speaking of the laws of natural selection …
Stateside,
financial crisis has been averted, that is until February. Everyone in Washington
has agreed not to agree and they have kicked the can down the street a few
blocks, raising the debt ceiling to some newly ridiculous level. We live to
procrastinate another day. Did any of you catch the 60 Minutes segment last night, dealing with the onerous issue of
campaign finance reform in the U.S. government. I leave you with my righteous
indignation – in what universe is it ok for elected officials to abide by a set
of rules that would be considered criminal behavior in the civilian sector? I guess
none of this will matter when the cosmic hammer comes down. I hope it happens
during a baseball game.
Go Leafs.
Written by
Jamie Oppenheimer c2013 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
2 comments:
I hate baseball, Jamie. Jim from Exshaw.
Baseball is like unbuttered toast made from white Wonder bread.
Jim's houseplant from Exshaw
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